The El Rey Club, Searchlight, NV

Thursday, April 26, 2012

Many thanks again to those who have watched the show. Whether it was
the original airing on TV, a rerun, or from an online source, it means
the world to me that you checked it out and helped spread the
word.Speaking of spreading the word, I'm targeting the mighty Stephens
Press, which specializes in Nevada/Las Vegas-centric books (and owns the
Las Vegas Review Journal) as the best hope for the book finding a
publisher. I still have queries and proposals out all over the country,
but these folks look like the likeliest of candidates. If you wouldn't
mind sending an email to them wondering why they can't find my book on
their list of titles, or mention that you saw this fascinating story on
This History Channel and was hoping to be able to buy the book...every
little bit helps!The email for Stephens Press is info@stephenspress.com

Moving
on...It seems that I didn't answer quite all of the questions with my
last note, or perhaps I sparked new ones. Either way I have received
quite a few others and I offer answers to those most asked questions.

Is Rick Nice?

I
can say with all honesty that Rick, Kelly, Ron, Kowboy (yes, even
Kowboy) and everyone I met at Rick's Restorations was extremely nice to
me and very professional people. The crew members working for The
History Channel were also very kind and professional people.

What struck me the most was how INTO
the El Rey story they all were, particularly Rick. Everyone loved the
El Rey facts I was spouting off, my personal involvement with the story,
and how I came to own this sign. It was stressed to me that it isn't
often that they get to profile something on the show with more than
sentimental value and love to work on something with historical
significance. Rick was quick to point out that it was something of a
rare treat for them to not having to bring something back to showroom
perfection. They really enjoyed the challenge to restore something, but
make it retain some of the character that comes with age. Even though
the patina of antiquity may be lost with the sanding and the painting,
this particular restoration was more about bringing history back to life
and everyone seemed pleased, if not honored to be a part of it.

Do You Think the Price ($2500) was Fair?

At
first I was a bit shocked by the price, but when I brought it in I
thought it was just "wood and paint." Of course, I'm not in Rick's line
of work and I do not work with my hands (juggling not withstanding).
When he told me the price I was reminded of how many times I have quoted
someone a price for my shows and then had to explain that if the
customer could spin plates and eat fire they could do the work
themselves. What you didn't see (among many things) was that Rick
actually quoted me two price options. One was what you saw on TV and
the other was for a less expensive route (about $1800). Why did I
choose the more expensive option? The work being done the less
expensive way simply wasn't what I wanted. It would have made it
showroom perfect, replacing the original metal with new sheet metal,
newer stock wood, newer hardware and a noticeably un-weathered paint
job. It simply wouldn't have looked right nor would it have retained
any of the charm of finding such a rare piece of history in that
desert. Rick and his team took an artist's approach to this restoration
and I really respect that a lot.There were a LOT of man-hours put into
that sign and damn near all the work was done by hand. The paint
work/lettering alone was all done by hand (as you saw on TV) and I was
told just matching up the letters to the original was a REAL CHALLENGE
given how faded the original was. The sign's metal was too thin to be
sand-blasted and everything was done by hand. Finding aged redwood was
neither easy nor inexpensive and the wood work/framing was done in a way to
make the sign look as though the thing had been weathered and warped by
desert winds and heat. Add in the "advertising" for my book that the
show brought in and I think it was money well spent. Worth every penny!

Did Rick Really Know That Much About The El Rey Club?

I
cannot lay claim to any knowledge of what he did or didn't know prior
to my coming in there. His brother, Ron, knows a lot of people in
Searchlight and he knew of the place. The night before I went out to
Rick's for the first time I noticed a lot of activity on my blogs. All
about the El Rey. The activity came from a HUGE International Property
Rights law firm. The next day Rick was spouting off info and I was
surprised to hear he knew so much. However, some of what he said to me
was almost word-for-word from my book. I would imagine The History
Channel prepares Rick for a lot of TV restorations and given that so
much of my info is either available online or at the Copyright Office,
it would neither surprise me nor bother me in the least to hear he had a little
help...particularly if the help actually came from my research, albeit
in a circuitous way. :)

What's Standing on the Spot Today Where the El Rey Once Stood?

NOTHING!
It has been a vacant lot since 1962. One day I hope to own it. It's
for sale right now, but I don't have a spare $300K burning a hole in my
pocket. But I can dream. I do have plans for that spot. Stay tuned!

Were There People Watching the Taping Other than TV Crew or Rick's Team?

Yes.
Rick's, much like the Silver & Gold Pawn Shop (Home to the Pawn
Stars) has become something of a tourist attraction in its own right and
both days I was taping there was a large crowd of people around
snapping photos. I imagine I'm in somebody's Vegas scrapbook right now.

I Missed the Show. Can I See it Again?

You
didn't see it the first time so technically, NO. You can't see it
"again." lol However they replay those shows OFTEN both on the HD
channel and the regular channel. You may wish to check the ON DEMAND menu of your cable/satellite provider. Up until this afternoon it was
available on The American restoration website, but the newest episodes
are up there now. Eventually you can get it on iTunes and I'm sure
SOMEWHERE on the web you can find a stream of it.

Where is Rick's Restorations and Can I Visit It?

Rick's
Restorations is in downtown Las Vegas and it is about a mile away from
the Pawn Stars pawn shop and within walking distance of two of my
FAVORITE restaurants in town (Lola's Louisiana Kitchen and Bar &
Bistro). Tours are available and it is always fun to go see the place.
Specifically, Rick's Restorations is located at...

They
have a website: http://www.ricksrestorations.com/They have a Facebook
Page: https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100000134629901
They also have a Fan Page on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/ricksrestorationsfanpage

I
highly recommend you check them out if in Vegas or simply LIKE them on
Facebook. Feel free to let them know I sent you and tell them how much
you liked the work they did on my billboard.

The research & collecting of photos and memorabilia from the El Rey Club never stops! Please contact me at 702-465-5604 or email me at andy@andymartello.com if you have stories or memorabilia to share.

Tuesday, April 24, 2012

The research & collecting of photos and memorabilia from the El Rey Club never stops! Please contact me at 702-465-5604 or email me at andy@andymartello.com if you have stories or memorabilia to share.

Saturday, April 21, 2012

Thanks to everyone for watching the show and encouraging so many
others to do the same. 1.9 million people saw the show and that's a
great start on my quest to find that publisher! Please be sure to write
the History Channel and tell them you'd love to see more about the El
Rey Club. Americanrestorationtv@gmail.com

Better
yet, email publishing houses explaining that the El Rey Club is a story
that you'd love to read. If they know there are people willing to buy
that book, somebody will be willing to publish it.

Anyway,
people have been flooding my inbox with questions about the show so I
thought I'd post a note and answer them here. Some of the questions are
sillier than others, but I'll try to answer them all here, starting
with the two most asked questions...

What am I going to do with the sign?

I'm
going to try and sell it on Pawn Stars.Just kidding!I'm actually
putting it on eBay. (ba-dum-BUMP!)The sign will eventually be on display
in my home. I need to figure out what my living situation will be
before committing such a large section of wall to it. I will not be
living in this house for a lot longer thanks to the split with April and
therefore any place I go will need to be able to accommodate this
treasured addition to my El Rey Club collection.

If I cannot display it wherever I live it will go on loan to local museums.

Where is it now and where am I going to put it?

It is in my garage right now, off the stands they made for it. I have given serious thought to making it my headboard.

Am I happy with the show?

EXTREMELY!
Searchlight, The El Rey Club, & Willie Martello got the majority of
the coverage in the program. About 12-15 minutes in total and it did a
great job of telling the story. I'd have preferred more of the cool
stories ABOUT the place were included so it would be a better
representation of WHY the El Rey was historically significant and why I
would bother researching it for the last seven years. But there's only
so much they can include in a short show and what they presented did not
hurt Willie's legacy one bit. Rather, it helped and that's what
matters most.

Did I actually pay $2500 to have it restored/Do they make people pay?

Rick's
Restorations is a business and I am a customer. So yes, I paid for the
sign to be restored. However I did have help from friends and family.
Aside from savings thanks to my awesome job and some private gigs,
generous donations came from people like Marty Martello, Matt Martello, Melia Shumaker, Patrick Bertleson,
and others (apologies if I have not mentioned you here.). My tax
refund (the first I've had in years) also made a big chunk of the
payment. If I put five bucks in a slot machine and turned it into ten,
it all went towards the sign.

Have I been contacted by any publishers or agents?

No.
I've had a few bites from my last round of query letters, but nobody
has contacted me as a result of seeing the show. Even with almost 2
million people watching the show, it seems none of those people are in
publishing. That's why I implore people to email publishers directly
about wanting to read this book about the place. If enough people are
asking, "Where can I buy this book?"
eventually someone will publish it. Here's a link to my agent query
letter.
http://andymartello.blogspot.com/2012/04/author-seeking-representationpublicatio.html

Did I really find that billboard in the desert?

Technically,
no. A man named Mike Madden found it and contacted me. He lives in
Searchlight, found it and called right away. He didn't even charge me
for it. So other than the cost of a tank of gas and a bottle of
"thank-you beer" I didn't pay anything for the sign. The story of how I
got this thing can be found
here...http://andymartello.blogspot.com/2012/01/el-rey-club-updates-roll-of-dice-big.html

Has Willie's family reacted to the episode?

So
far I've heard from a few family members via text and phone calls and
they all loved it. Nick Martello has chimed in as well through FB. No
complaints yet, so I think it was a success with them.

How am I related to Willie Martello?

This
is a big part of the book, but I've never really hidden the fact that
in all likelihood, I'm not related at all. Just a crazy coincidence we
have the same last name. I'd have never given a second thought to the
El Rey Club had Willie Martello had a different last name. Makes the
story that much better.

Was that my pick-up truck?

Nope. That belonged to my friend & neighbor Victor.

Were my reactions genuine or was there a script?

You
saw my genuine reactions to the initial reveal, but alas, many things
in reality TV are shot over and over again for coverage and such. So
there were plenty of times where I felt like I was being told to cue the
spontaneous reactions. lol There was no
script and so much of what I said was mixed with what you saw on
screen. There was close to 7 1/2 hours worth of footage, reactions, and
discussion between me and Rick and that's only talking about the time I
was filming (over two days). Lord knows how much they covered of the
actual restoration

Is that really my ponytail?

This
question obviously came from "new" friends and folks who have not met
me nor known me since 1987.Yep. My ponytail. My AWESOME ponytail. My
AWESOME 25-year-old ponytail. Based upon some of the reactions (and
some of the total babes) who have contacted me personally to tell me
they LOVED it, you can see why I've kept it so many years. lol

Am I single?

This
is no joke. I'm not trying to be funny here. My sister has been asked
this many times now and I've seen a bizarre (but flattering) increase
of private FB messages wondering this exact thing. So I must assume I
need to be on TV much more often if I'd like my social calendar to be
that much more enjoyable. lol

Yes. Single. Newly-single
if that matters. I have not talked much about it publicly due to
special circumstances, but will once we're "officially" (legally) done.

Very
flattered, but this show wasn't about seeing me on TV. I enjoy the
attention though. Makes me blush every time a new message or a comment
from friends who were "TOLD to ask me." lol

The research & collecting of photos and memorabilia from the El Rey Club never stops! Please contact me at 702-465-5604 or email me at andy@andymartello.com if you have stories or memorabilia to share.

After a horrific blaze destroyed Willie Martello’s El Rey Club in January of 1962, nearly fifty years would pass before anyone knew of how that very casino and one-time brothel would inadvertently launch the career of Francis Ford Coppola, provide a template for present-day gambling resorts, and upset the mob by luring millions of dollars away from Las Vegas and into the tiny mining town of Searchlight, Nevada.

Were it not for my chance discovery of a single photo in a Las Vegas museum, the El Rey Club would be known as little more than the seedy brothel where Senator Harry Reid learned to swim. Willie Martello was a hard-drinking gambler and cavalier womanizer of notorious charm and remarkable luck. Between 1946 and 1962, Martello’s club brought an estimated $5,000,000.00 a year into the near-ghost town of Searchlight, Nevada, by using everything from prostitutes to plane rides, passenger pigeons to wild burros, transgendered celebrities to the DeCastro Sisters. His outrageous exploits and accomplishments should place him among magnates like Howard Hughes or Steve Wynn, yet somehow, very few know his name. What little that is known, mostly excerpts from Senator Reid’s books, is rather unflattering. Referred to exclusively as a pimp or whoremonger, the unbelievable tales of Willie’s innovations and escapades are mysteriously absent. Lost for over sixty years, these vibrant stories are now brought to light.

I have been a professional comedian, writer, and entertainer for over 25 years. At present I am a columnist for the North Las Vegas Voice newspaper and a regular contributor to Strip Las Vegas magazine. As a freelance humor and opinion writer, my work has been published at several well-read online publications, including AbsoluteWrite.com, The Riverwalk Journal, and GapersBlock.com. Having only encountered three other Martellos who were not in my family, the prospect of finding a Martello who owned a casino and brothel—possibly a distant relative, transformed me into “an accidental historian.” This project began as a hobby, developed into a wildly popular section of my blog, and rapidly turned into a six-year mission to get this story told. As a result, I’m proud to say some of my research was used in the writing of Robert Graysmith’s best-seller, The Girl in Alfred Hitchcock’s Shower. Mr. Graysmith, a great fan and supporter of my work, is very eager to find my finished book on the shelves, as am I.

I offer my most sincere and heartfelt thanks for your time and your consideration. At your request I will forward an outline, table of contents, and sample chapters for your perusal. Should you require an in-depth, formal proposal, please do not hesitate to contact me. I am looking hopefully forward to the prospect of working with you in the near future.

Potentially yours,

Andy Martello

The research & collecting of photos and memorabilia from the El Rey Club never stops! Please contact me at 702-465-5604 or email me at andy@andymartello.com if you have stories or memorabilia to share.

Monday, April 9, 2012

After 7 years of research, collecting, and writing, The El Rey Club will be getting national TV exposure on The History Channel. This appearance on the very popular, American Restoration, could be what FINALLY catches the eye of a prominent agent or publisher and gets my long-awaited book out into the world!

- Learn about the discovery of a vintage 1950s billboard from the long-gone casino in Searchlight, NV!

- Enjoy the story of Willie Martello's El Rey Club and how I became involved with this project!

- Marvel at the talents of Rick Dale and his crew as they literally bring a priceless piece of Nevada history back from the dead!

This is less about watching me on TV and more about getting this story told. The more people who watch this episode, the more it will be replayed and therefore, the better the chances that someone in the publishing world will see this and recognize the fascinating stories that my book has stored inside. I would not be able to buy this kind of advertising anywhere else. It means the world to me that you watch and spread the news.

Please share this event invitation, post pleas to watch the show on your social networking sites, email your friends—tell people about this! SOMEBODY out there knows SOMEBODY in the publishing world and with your help this show will lead them to my book.

Can't watch it LIVE? Set your DVR, download the show on iTunes, watch the episode on the American Restoration website. :)

The research & collecting of photos and memorabilia from the El Rey Club never stops! Please contact me at 702-465-5604 or email me at andy@andymartello.com if you have stories or memorabilia to share.

The unreal, but TRUE story of the little casino that changed Las Vegas FOREVER!

The THIRTEEN-TIME award-winning book, by Andy Martello is out NOW! The King of Casinos: Willie Martello and the El Rey Club has been sold in six different countries and has earned 13 awards, including an International Book Award, a USA Best Books award, a Readers' Favorite award, and it was named BOOK OF THE YEAR by the Casino Chip & Gaming Token Collectors Club.

To commemorate Nevada's 150th birthday, NewsReview.com named the book one of the essential 150 Things for 150 Years, a list of the best Nevada movies, songs, television shows, and books.

Check back for information about a major motion picture based upon this incredible book.

Andy continues to collect artifacts and stories from the El Rey Club. If you have any information to share or items for his collection, contact Andy Martello today!

About Me

Call 702-465-5604 or Visit www.andymartello.com.
Andy Martello is celebrating his 25th year as America's premier corporate entertainer. Andy has been seen on NBC's "Last Comic Standing", WGN's "The Bozo Show" and appeared in national television commercials. He has even performed for President George Bush (the original, NOT the sequel!)